<h2 align="center"><SPAN name="IV">IV</SPAN></h2>
<h3 align="center">9 FROGNALL STREET, W. C.</h3>
<p>The covered alleyway gave upon Quadrant Mews; or so declared
a notice painted on the dead wall of the passage.</p>
<p>Overhead, complaining as it swayed in the wind, hung the
smirched and weather-worn sign-board of the Hog-in-the-Pound
public house; wherefrom escaped sounds of such revelry by night
as is indulged in by the British working-man in hours of ease.
At the curb in front of the house of entertainment, dejected
animals drooping between their shafts, two hansoms stood in
waiting, until such time as the lords of their destinies should
see fit to sally forth and inflict themselves upon a cab-hungry
populace. As Kirkwood turned, a third vehicle rumbled up out of
the mews.</p>
<p>Kirkwood can close his eyes, even at this late day, and both
see and hear it all again—even as he can see the unbroken row
of dingy dwellings that lined his way back from Quadrant Mews
to Frognall Street corner: all drab and unkempt, all sporting
in their fan-lights the legend and lure, "Furnished
Apartments."</p>
<p>For, between his curiosity about and his concern for the
girl, he was being led back to Number 9, by the nose, as it
were,—hardly willingly, at best. Profoundly stupefied by the
contemplation of his own temerity, he yet returned unfaltering.
He who had for so long plumed himself upon his strict
supervision of his personal affairs and equally steadfast
unconsciousness of his neighbor's businesses, now found himself
in the very act of pushing in where he was not wanted: as he
had been advised in well-nigh as many words. He experienced an
effect of standing to one side, a witness of his own folly,
with rising wonder, unable to credit the strength of the
infatuation which was placing him so conspicuously in the way
of a snubbing.</p>
<p>If perchance he were to meet the girl again as she was
leaving Number 9,—what then? The contingency dismayed him
incredibly, in view of the fact that it did not avail to make
him pause. To the contrary he disregarded it resolutely; mad,
impertinent, justified of his unnamed apprehensions, or simply
addled,—he held on his way.</p>
<p>He turned up Frognall Street with the manner of one out for
a leisurely evening stroll. Simultaneously, from the farther
corner, another pedestrian debouched, into the thoroughfare—a
mere moving shadow at that distance, brother to blacker shadows
that skulked in the fenced areas and unlively entries of that
poorly lighted block. The hush was something beyond belief,
when one remembered the nearness of blatant Tottenham Court
Road.</p>
<p>Kirkwood conceived a wholly senseless curiosity about the
other wayfarer. The man was walking rapidly, heels ringing with
uncouth loudness, cane tapping the flagging at brief intervals.
Both sounds ceased abruptly as their cause turned in beneath
one of the porticos. In the emphatic and unnatural quiet that
followed, Kirkwood, stepping more lightly, fancied that another
shadow followed the first, noiselessly and with furtive
stealth.</p>
<p>Could it be Number 9 into which they had passed? The
American's heart beat a livelier tempo at the suggestion. If it
had not been Number 9—he was still too far away to tell—it
was certainly one of the dwellings adjacent thereunto. The
improbable possibility (But why improbable?) that the girl was
being joined by her father, or by friends, annoyed him with
illogical intensity. He mended his own pace, designing to pass
whichever house it might be before the door should be closed;
thought better of this, and slowed up again, anathematizing
himself with much excuse for being the inquisitive dolt that he
was.</p>
<p>Approaching Number 9 with laggard feet, he manufactured a
desire to light a cigarette, as a cover for his design, were he
spied upon by unsuspected eyes. Cane under arm, hands cupped to
shield a vesta's flame, he stopped directly before the portico,
turning his eyes askance to the shadowed doorway; and made a
discovery sufficiently startling to hold him spellbound and,
incidentally, to scorch his gloves before he thought to drop
the match.</p>
<p>The door of Number 9 stood ajar, a black interval an inch or
so in width showing between its edge and the jamb.</p>
<p>Suspicion and alarm set his wits a-tingle. More distinctly
he recalled the jarring bang, accompanied by the metallic click
of the latch, when the girl had shut herself in—and him out.
Now, some person or persons had followed her, neglecting the
most obvious precaution of a householder. And why? Why but
because the intruders did not wish the sound of closing to be
audible to her—or those—within?</p>
<p>He reminded himself that it was all none of his affair,
decided to pass on and go his ways in peace, and impulsively,
swinging about, marched straight away for the unclosed
door.</p>
<p>"'Old'ard, guvner!"</p>
<p>Kirkwood halted on the cry, faltering in indecision. Should
he take the plunge, or withdraw? Synchronously he was conscious
that a man's figure had detached itself from the shadows
beneath the nearest portico and was drawing nearer, with every
indication of haste, to intercept him.</p>
<p>"'Ere now, guvner, yer mykin' a mistyke. You don't live
'ere."</p>
<p>"How do you know?" demanded Kirkwood crisply, tightening his
grip on his stick.</p>
<p>Was this the second shadow he had seemed to see—the
confederate of him who had entered Number 9; a sentry to
forestall interruption? If so, the fellow lacked discretion,
though his determination that the American should not interfere
was undeniable. It was with an ugly and truculent manner, if
more warily, that the man closed in.</p>
<p>"I knows. You clear hout, or—"</p>
<p>He flung out a hand with the plausible design of grasping
Kirkwood by the collar. The latter lifted his stick, deflecting
the arm, and incontinently landed his other fist forcibly on
the fellow's chest. The man reeled back, cursing. Before he
could recover Kirkwood calmly crossed the threshold, closed the
door and put his shoulder to it. In another instant, fumbling
in the darkness, he found the bolts and drove them home.</p>
<p>And it was done, the transformation accomplished; his
inability to refrain from interfering had encompassed his
downfall, had changed a peaceable and law-abiding alien within
British shores into a busybody, a trespasser, a misdemeanant,
a—yes, for all he knew to the contrary, in the estimation of
the Law, a burglar, prime candidate for a convict's
stripes!</p>
<p>Breathing hard with excitement he turned and laid his back
against the panels, trembling in every muscle, terrified by the
result of his impulsive audacity, thunder-struck by a
lightning-like foreglimpse of its possible consequences. Of
what colossal imprudence had he not been guilty?</p>
<p>"The devil!" he whispered. "What an ass, what an utter ass I
am!"</p>
<p>Behind him the knob was rattled urgently, to an
accompaniment of feet shuffling on the stone; and
immediately—if he were to make a logical deduction from the
rasping and scraping sound within the door-casing—the
bell-pull was violently agitated, without, however, educing any
response from the bell itself, wherever that might be situate.
After which, as if in despair, the outsider again rattled and
jerked the knob.</p>
<p>Be his status what it might, whether servant of the
household, its caretaker, or a night watchman, the man was
palpably determined both to get himself in and Kirkwood out,
and yet (curious to consider) determined to gain his end
without attracting undue attention. Kirkwood had expected to
hear the knocker's thunder, as soon as the bell failed to give
tongue; but it did not sound although there <i>was</i> a
knocker,—Kirkwood himself had remarked that antiquated and
rusty bit of ironmongery affixed to the middle panel of the
door. And it made him feel sure that something surreptitious
and lawless was in process within those walls, that the
confederate without, having failed to prevent a stranger from
entering, left unemployed a means so certain-sure to rouse the
occupants.</p>
<p>But his inferential analysis of this phase of the
proceedings was summarily abrupted by that identical alarm. In
a trice the house was filled with flying echoes, wakened to
sonorous riot by the crash and clamor of the knocker; and
Kirkwood stood fully two yards away, his heart hammering
wildly, his nerves a-jingle, much as if the resounding blows
had landed upon his own person rather than on stout oaken
planking.</p>
<p>Ere he had time to wonder, the racket ceased, and from the
street filtered voices in altercation. Listening, Kirkwood's
pulses quickened, and he laughed uncertainly for pure relief,
retreating to the door and putting an ear to a crack.</p>
<p>The accents of one speaker were new in his hearing, stern,
crisp, quick with the spirit of authority which animates that
most austere and dignified limb of the law to be encountered
the world over, a London bobby.</p>
<p>"Now then, my man, what do you want there? Come now, speak
up, and step out into the light, where I can see you."</p>
<p>The response came in the sniffling snarl of the London
ne'er-do-well, the unemployable rogue whose chiefest occupation
seems to be to march in the ranks of The Unemployed on the
occasion of its annual demonstrations.</p>
<p>"Le' me alone, carntcher? Ah'm doin' no 'arm,
officer,—"</p>
<p>"Didn't you hear me? Step out here. Ah, that's better.... No
harm, eh? Perhaps you'll explain how there's no harm breakin'
into unoccupied 'ouses?"</p>
<p>"Gorblimy, 'ow was I to know? 'Ere's a toff 'ands me
sixpence fer hopenin' 'is cab door to-dye, an', sezee, 'My
man,' 'e sez, 'yer've got a 'onest fyce. W'y don'cher work?'
sezee. ''Ow can I?' sez I. ''Ere'm I hout of a job these six
months, lookin' fer work every dye an' carn't find it.' Sezee,
'Come an' see me this hevenin' at me home, Noine, Frognall
Stryte,' 'e sez, an'—"</p>
<p>"That'll do for now. You borrow a pencil and paper and write
it down and I'll read it when I've got more time; I never heard
the like of it. This 'ouse hasn't been lived in these two
years. Move on, and don't let me find you round 'ere again.
March, I say!"</p>
<p>There was more of it—more whining explanations artfully
tinctured with abuse, more terse commands to depart, the whole
concluding with scraping footsteps, diminuendo, and another
perfunctory, rattle of the knob as the bobby, having shoo'd the
putative evil-doer off, assured himself that no damage had
actually been done. Then he, too, departed, satisfied and
self-righteous, leaving a badly frightened but very grateful
amateur criminal to pursue his self-appointed career of
crime.</p>
<p>He had no choice other than to continue; in point of fact,
it had been insanity just then to back out, and run the risk of
apprehension at the hands of that ubiquitous bobby, who (for
all he knew) might be lurking not a dozen yards distant,
watchful for just such a sequel. Still, Kirkwood hesitated with
the best of excuses. Reassuring as he had found the sentinel's
extemporized yarn,—proof positive that the fellow had had no
more right to prohibit a trespass than Kirkwood to commit
one,—at the same time he found himself pardonably a prey to
emotions of the utmost consternation and alarm. If he feared to
leave the house he had no warrant whatever to assume that he
would be permitted to remain many minutes unharmed within its
walls of mystery.</p>
<p>The silence of it discomfited him beyond measure; it was, in
a word, uncanny.</p>
<p>Before him, as he lingered at the door, vaguely disclosed by
a wan illumination penetrating a dusty and begrimed fan-light,
a broad hall stretched indefinitely towards the rear of the
building, losing itself in blackness beyond the foot of a
flight of stairs. Save for a few articles of furniture,—a hall
table, an umbrella-stand, a tall dumb clock flanked by
high-backed chairs,—it was empty. Other than Kirkwood's own
restrained respiration not a sound throughout the house
advertised its inhabitation; not a board creaked beneath the
pressure of a foot, not a mouse rustled in the wainscoting or
beneath the floors, not a breath of air stirred sighing in the
stillness.</p>
<p>And yet, a tremendous racket had been raised at the front
door, within the sixty seconds past! And yet, within twenty
minutes two persons, at least, had preceded Kirkwood into the
building! Had they not heard? The speculation seemed
ridiculous. Or had they heard and, alarmed, been too
effectually hobbled by the coils of their nefarious designs to
dare reveal themselves, to investigate the cause of that
thunderous summons? Or were they, perhaps, aware of Kirkwood's
entrance, and lying <i>perdui</i>, in some dark corner, to
ambush him as he passed?</p>
<p>True, that were hardly like the girl. True, on the other
hand, it were possible that she had stolen away while Kirkwood
was hanging in irresolution by the passage to Quadrant Mews.
Again, the space of time between Kirkwood's dismissal and his
return had been exceedingly brief; whatever her errand, she
could hardly have fulfilled it and escaped. At that moment she
might be in the power and at the mercy of him who had followed
her; providing he were not friendly. And in that case, what
torment and what peril might not be hers?</p>
<p>Spurred by solicitude, the young man put personal
apprehensions in his pocket and forgot them, cautiously picking
his way through the gloom to the foot of the stairs. There, by
the newel-post, he paused. Darkness walled him about. Overhead
the steps vanished in a well of blackness; he could not even
see the ceiling; his eyes ached with futile effort to fathom
the unknown; his ears rang with unrewarded strain of listening.
The silence hung inviolate, profound.</p>
<p>Slowly he began to ascend, a hand following the balusters,
the other with his cane exploring the obscurity before him. On
the steps, a carpet, thick and heavy, muffled his footfalls. He
moved noiselessly. Towards the top the staircase curved, and
presently a foot that groped for a higher level failed to find
it. Again he halted, acutely distrustful.</p>
<p>Nothing happened.</p>
<p>He went on, guided by the balustrade, passing three doors,
all open, through which the undefined proportions of a
drawing-room and boudoir were barely suggested in a ghostly
dusk. By each he paused, listening, hearing nothing.</p>
<p>His foot struck with a deadened thud against the bottom step
of the second flight, and his pulses fluttered wildly for a
moment. Two minutes—three—he waited in suspense. From above
came no sound. He went on, as before, save that twice a step
yielded, complaining, to his weight. Toward the top the close
air, like the darkness, seemed to weigh more heavily upon his
consciousness; little drops of perspiration started out on his
forehead, his scalp tingled, his mouth was hot and dry, he felt
as if stifled.</p>
<p>Again the raised foot found no level higher than its
fellows. He stopped and held his breath, oppressed by a
conviction that some one was near him. Confirmation of this
came startlingly—an eerie whisper in the night, so close to
him that he fancied he could feel the disturbed air fanning his
face.</p>
<p>"<i>Is it you, Eccles</i>?" He had no answer ready. The
voice was masculine, if he analyzed it correctly. Dumb and
stupid he stood poised upon the point of panic.</p>
<p>"<i>Eccles, is it you</i>?"</p>
<p>The whisper was both shrill and shaky. As it ceased Kirkwood
was half blinded by a flash of light, striking him squarely in
the eyes. Involuntarily he shrank back a pace, to the first
step from the top. Instantaneously the light was eclipsed.</p>
<p>"<i>Halt or—or I fire</i>!"</p>
<p>By now he realized that he had been scrutinized by the aid
of an electric hand-lamp. The tremulous whisper told him
something else—that the speaker suffered from nerves as
high-strung as his own. The knowledge gave him inspiration. He
cried at a venture, in a guarded voice, "<i>Hands up</i>!"—and
struck out smartly with his stick. Its ferrule impinged upon
something soft but heavy. Simultaneously he heard a low,
frightened cry, the cane was swept aside, a blow landed
glancingly on his shoulder, and he was carried fairly off his
feet by the weight of a man hurled bodily upon him with
staggering force and passion. Reeling, he was borne back and
down a step or two, and then,—choking on an oath,—dropped his
cane and with one hand caught the balusters, while the other
tore ineffectually at wrists of hands that clutched his throat.
So, for a space, the two hung, panting and struggling.</p>
<p>Then endeavoring to swing his shoulders over against the
wall, Kirkwood released his grip on the hand-rail and stumbled
on the stairs, throwing his antagonist out of balance. The
latter plunged downward, dragging Kirkwood with him. Clawing,
kicking, grappling, they went to the bottom, jolted violently
by each step; but long before the last was reached, Kirkwood's
throat was free.</p>
<p>Throwing himself off, he got to his feet and grasped the
railing for support; then waited, panting, trying to get his
bearings. Himself painfully shaken and bruised, he shrewdly
surmised that his assailant had fared as ill, if not worse.
And, in point of fact, the man lay with neither move nor moan,
still as death at the American's feet.</p>
<p>And once more silence had folded its wings over Number 9,
Frognall Street.</p>
<p>More conscious of that terrifying, motionless presence
beneath him, than able to distinguish it by power of vision, he
endured interminable minutes of trembling horror, in a witless
daze, before he thought of his match-box. Immediately he found
it and struck a light. As the wood caught and the bright small
flame leaped in the pent air, he leaned forward, over the body,
breathlessly dreading what he must discover.</p>
<p>The man lay quiet, head upon the floor, legs and hips on the
stairs. One arm had fallen over his face, hiding the upper
half. The hand gleamed white and delicate as a woman's. His
chin was smooth and round, his lips thin and petulant. Beneath
his top-coat, evening dress clothed a short and slender figure.
Nothing whatever of his appearance suggested the burly ruffian,
the midnight marauder; he seemed little more than a boy old
enough to dress for dinner. In his attitude there was something
pitifully suggestive of a beaten child, thrown into a
corner.</p>
<p>Conscience-smitten and amazed Kirkwood stared on until,
without warning, the match flickered and went out. Then,
straightening up with an exclamation at once of annoyance and
concern, he rattled the box; it made no sound,—was empty. In
disgust he swore it was the devil's own luck, that he should
run out of vestas at a time so critical. He could not even say
whether the fellow was dead, unconscious, or simply shamming.
He had little idea of his looks; and to be able to identify him
might save a deal of trouble at some future time,—since he,
Kirkwood, seemed so little able to disengage himself from the
clutches of this insane adventure! And the girl—. what had
become of her? How could he continue to search for her, without
lights or guide, through all those silent rooms, whose walls
might inclose a hundred hidden dangers in that house of
mystery?</p>
<p>But he debated only briefly. His blood was young, and it was
hot; it was quite plain to him that he could not withdraw and
retain his self-respect. If the girl was there to be found,
most assuredly, he must find her. The hand-lamp that had
dazzled him at the head of the stairs should be his aid, now
that he thought of it,—and providing he was able to find
it.</p>
<p>In the scramble on the stairs he had lost his hat, but he
remembered that the vesta's short-lived light had discovered
this on the floor beyond the man's body. Carefully stepping
across the latter he recovered his head-gear, and then,
kneeling, listened with an ear close to the fellow's face. A
softly regular beat of breathing reassured him. Half rising, he
caught the body beneath the armpits, lifting and dragging it
off the staircase; and knelt again, to feel of each pocket in
the man's clothing, partly as an obvious precaution, to relieve
him of his advertised revolver against an untimely wakening,
partly to see if he had the lamp about him.</p>
<p>The search proved fruitless. Kirkwood suspected that the
weapon, like his own, had existed only in his victim's ready
imagination. As for the lamp, in the act of rising he struck it
with his foot, and picked it up.</p>
<p>It felt like a metal tube a couple of inches in diameter, a
foot or so in length, passably heavy. He fumbled with it
impatiently. "However the dickens," he wondered audibly, "does
the infernal machine work?" As it happened, the thing worked
with disconcerting abruptness as his untrained fingers fell
hapchance on the spring. A sudden glare again smote him in the
face, and at the same instant, from a point not a yard away,
apparently, an inarticulate cry rang out upon the
stillness.</p>
<p>Heart in his mouth, he stepped back, lowering the lamp
(which impishly went out) and lifting a protecting forearm.</p>
<p>"Who's that?" he demanded harshly.</p>
<p>A strangled sob of terror answered him, blurred by a swift
rush of skirts, and in a breath his shattered nerves quieted
and a glimmer of common sense penetrated the murk anger and
fear had bred in his brain. He understood, and stepped forward,
catching blindly at the darkness with eager hands.</p>
<p>"Miss Calendar!" he cried guardedly. "Miss Calendar, it is
I—Philip Kirkwood!"</p>
<p>There was a second sob, of another caliber than the first;
timid fingers brushed his, and a hand, warm and fragile, closed
upon his own in a passion of relief and gratitude.</p>
<p>"Oh, I am so g-glad!" It was Dorothy Calendar's voice,
beyond mistake. "I—I didn't know what t-to t-think.... When
the light struck your face I was sure it was you, but when I
called, you answered in a voice so strange,—not like yours at
all! ... Tell me," she pleaded, with palpable effort to steady
herself; "what has happened?"</p>
<p>"I think, perhaps," said Kirkwood uneasily, again troubled
by his racing pulses, "perhaps you can do that better than
I."</p>
<p>"Oh!" said the voice guiltily; her fingers trembled on his,
and were gently withdrawn. "I was so frightened," she confessed
after a little pause, "so frightened that I hardly understand
... But you? How did you—?"</p>
<p>"I worried about you," he replied, in a tone absurdly
apologetic. "Somehow it didn't seem right. It was none of my
business, of course, but ... I couldn't help coming back. This
fellow, whoever he is—don't worry; he's unconscious—slipped
into the house in a manner that seemed to me suspicious. I
hardly know why I followed, except that he left the door an
open invitation to interference ..."</p>
<p>"I can't be thankful enough," she told him warmly, "that you
did interfere. You have indeed saved me from ..."</p>
<p>"Yes?"</p>
<p>"I don't know what. If I knew the man—"</p>
<p>"You don't <i>know</i> him?"</p>
<p>"I can't even guess. The light—?"</p>
<p>She paused inquiringly. Kirkwood fumbled with the lamp, but,
whether its rude handling had impaired some vital part of the
mechanism, or whether the batteries through much use were worn
out, he was able to elicit only one feeble glow, which was
instantly smothered by the darkness.</p>
<p>"It's no use," he confessed. "The thing's gone wrong."</p>
<p>"Have you a match?"</p>
<p>"I used my last before I got hold of this."</p>
<p>"Oh," she commented, discouraged. "Have you any notion what
he looks like?"</p>
<p>Kirkwood thought briefly. "Raffles," he replied with a
chuckle. "He looks like an amateurish and very callow Raffles.
He's in dress clothes, you know."</p>
<p>"I wonder!" There was a nuance of profound bewilderment in
her exclamation. Then: "He knocked against something in the
hall—a chair, I presume; at all events, I heard that and put
out the light. I was ... in the room above the drawing-room,
you see. I stole down to this floor—was there, in the corner
by the stairs when he passed within six inches, and never
guessed it. Then, when he got on the next floor, I started on;
but you came in. I slipped into the drawing-room and crouched
behind a chair. You went on, but I dared not move until ... And
then I heard some one cry out, and you fell down the stairs
together. I hope you were not hurt—?"</p>
<p>"Nothing worth mention; but <i>he</i> must have got a pretty
stiff knock, to lay him out so completely." Kirkwood stirred
the body with his toe, but the man made no sign. "Dead to the
world ... And now, Miss Calendar?"</p>
<p>If she answered, he did not hear; for on the heels of his
query banged the knocker down below; and thereafter crash
followed crash, brewing a deep and sullen thundering to rouse
the echoes and send them rolling, like voices of enraged
ghosts, through the lonely rooms.</p>
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